Generally not, but some plants are (eg the Venus Fly Trap).
No. It's a producer.
No. Deer would be more like a "predator" to a plant, not a parasite.
The gray fox is primarily a predator but does eat some plant matter also.
The decomposer is generally last in the list that includes the plant, the predator, and the prey along with the decomposer. The decomposer actually removes remaining tissue and plant parts from the area and returns it to the soil.
Predators eat other animals. Animals that are herbivores (plant eaters) are not predators. Lion- predatorBunny rabbit- not a predator
No. Sugarcane is a plant, not an animal.
it is a prey to most carnivors because it is a plant eater
Both. If the prey is a tree or plant, the predator is a Moose. If the prey is a Moose, the predator is a Tiger or other animal/human looking for food or game.
Both predator-prey and herbivore-plant relationships can act as density-dependent limiting factors because they are influenced by the population density of both the predator/herbivore and prey/plant species. As populations increase, predation pressure or herbivory can also increase, which can limit the growth of prey or plant populations. This creates a feedback loop that can help regulate population sizes in an ecosystem.
Juniper is a plant and only animals can be either preys or predators.
red pandas eat bamboo and other plant mater
carnivores eat only meat and predators eat both meat and plant